On or before January 1, 1994, every public and private employer in Nebraska subject to workers' compensation who has one or more employees and is subject to collective bargaining obligations or is obligated to negotiate with employees who are in a bargaining unit shall have at least one safety committee. The establishment of such safety committee shall be accomplished through the collective bargaining process.
On or before January 1, 1994, every public and private employer in Nebraska subject to workers' compensation who has one or more employees not subject to collective bargaining obligations or is not obligated to negotiate with a collective bargaining unit shall establish at least one safety committee.
The purpose of the committee is to bring employees and employers together in a non-adversarial, cooperative effort to promote safety at each worksite. The committee(s) is not and shall not serve as a bargaining unit. There is no authority to act as such or deal with collective bargaining issues. The safety committee is limited to assisting the employer by making recommendations regarding methods of addressing safety and health hazards at each worksite. Recommendations to the employer shall be advisory only and not deal with issues subject to collective bargaining. For those members not representing the employer, the employer shall seek volunteers through a written notice directed to all employees, to match the number of the employer's representatives. Employee safety committee representatives shall be selected as follows:
The names of such individuals shall be made available to all employees. Unless determined otherwise by collective bargaining, membership as an employee representative shall be made available to all employees at least once every two years. Employer representatives need not be rotated. If no new members are recruited, existing members may retain their committee membership. Terms may be staggered. It is an employee's right to seek to be an employee safety committee member and to otherwise participate in the selection process without being subject to penalties, discipline, employer interference, or reprisal of any kind.
Each employer shall present to the safety committee an effective injury prevention program which shall address all work sites and all classes of workers. Where workers are assigned to work sites covered by another existing injury prevention program, those workers may be covered under that program if it appropriately responds to the duties of the worker.
The program presented by the employer shall approach each category of workplace danger with the intention of totally preventing workplace injuries, if feasible. If total prevention is not feasible, the employer shall control the hazard as completely as is feasible. To the extent that potential exposure exists despite the designed controls, then the employer shall use safety and health rules, work practices, administrative controls, and personal protective equipment (PPE) to control that exposure.
The program shall include safety training addressing the following:
The primary consideration that may determine a program to be effective is if it results in reduction or elimination of accidents. Further consideration will be effective preventative measures, documentation, and constant response to unexpected emergencies.
It shall be the duty of each safety committee to adopt and maintain an effective written injury prevention program. The committee may adopt the program presented to them by the employer or may develop its own. Review of that program must be made available to all employees upon request.
The safety committee may review all deaths and recordable injuries or illnesses (Form 300 or First Report of Injury NWCC Form 1). After such review, and when appropriate, the committee may make written recommendations regarding future prevention. Such safety committee reviews shall not supersede normal federal enforcement or insurance investigations that may take place.
Employers shall report any workplace deaths within 48 hours (OSHA requires 8-hour notification), 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, to the Department's Office of Safety and Labor Standards, (800) 627-3611; Omaha residents should call (402) 595-3185.
Each employer shall retain up-to-date records of documents required by these regulations for each place of employment. The employer shall make such records available to the Department upon request, during normal work hours. The employer shall establish record- keeping procedures to control and maintain all accident and injury records (Form 300 or First Report of Injury NWCC Form 1) which employers shall retain for three years or longer if so advised by the Department. Those employers that are required by OSHA/MSHA to keep records of all work related deaths, any diagnosed occupational illnesses and any occupational injuries which involve loss of consciousness, restriction of work or motion, transfer to another job, or requires medical treatment beyond first aid shall make such records available to the safety committee and the Department upon request. The name(s) of the employee(s) shall not be made available unless agreed to by the employee(s).
The employer shall communicate to all employees, including non-English speaking employees, the employer's safety rules, policies, and procedures and any changes to such rules, policies, and procedures. A copy of any employer-implemented safety program shall be accessible to all employees and made available to the Department upon request. The employer's safety rules shall include both general work place safety and job site specific safety rules.
230 Neb. Admin. Code, ch. 6, § 002